The Top Reasons to Choose Appy

Why Appy

Appy Health is the 21st Century Cures Act “Member Choice” technology solution for healthcare consumers, patients, and employees (aka Appy Members), which was signed into law on December 13, 2016. 

What is Not Compliant!

Why the Appy Health Member Choice Technology is Complaint!

Objective

Solution

Description

Governance
Legislation
Stakeholders

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)

CMS's final rule on interoperability and patient access to health data applies to certain federally regulated payers, including Medicaid, the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), Medicare Advantage (MA), and certain Qualified Health Plan (QHP) issuers on the federally facilitated exchanges (FFEs). Stakeholders also include doctors, hospitals/facilities, and health IT developers

Compliance
Informatioj Blocking
Final Rule on Interoperability

The Cures Act prohibits "information blocking," defined broadly to mean practices that are likely to interfere with, prevent, or materially discourage the access, exchange, or use of EHl.

The final rule establishes policies to improve the exchange of health data to facilitate greater patient access to EHI. Reducing patient access barriers to their health information at no cost.

Key Goals
Improve Interoperability
Accelerate Advancement
Empower Patients
Standardization

Implementation of HL7 FHIR unites healthcare apps by creating a common set of APls tenable these platforms to share data and communicate with ease.

The Cures Act is designed to help accelerate medical product development and bring new innovations and advances to patients who need them faster and more efficiently.

Full access to personal health information allows patients to better manage their health care, remain informed about key treatment decisions and have more meaningful discussions with their clinicians.

The final rule establishes standards for application programing interfaces (APls) to improve the exchange of EHl and to enable patients to access their health information at no cost. Developers must ensure that their systems can communicate with third-party users, which include consumer apps.